vygostky and the education of infants and toddlers
TRANSCRIPT
Vygostky and the education of infants and toddlers:
A conceptual framework based on the notion of inclusion of typical and atypical
children
Angeles Molina Iturrondo, Ed.D.Carmen Milagros Velez Vega, MSWUniversity of Puerto RicoR_o Piedras, Puerto Rico
In April, 1993, the University of Puerto Rico's Medical Sciences Campus began to operate a
child development center for infants and toddlers based on the notion of inclusion. The center
serves 40 boys and girls between two months and three years of age. At least twenty percent of
the children have one or multiple forms of developmental disabilities or delays. Children with
special needs are integrated in groups of children with typical development, within an
environment that is appropriate for infants and toddlers. The fundamental goal is to foster
optimal development in all participating children, regardless of their developmental disabilities
or delays, thus capitalizing on each child's developmental strengths. By strengths it should be
understood any physical, cognitive, affective or social ability that becomes an asset to the child
in the process of transcending potential limitations imposed by a particular developmental lag or
condition. Therefore, the educational intervention is predicated on the idea of the optimization of
the human potential as early as in infancy. In the case of children with atypical development, this
type of intervention is intended to prevent the further expansion of handicapping conditions. The
key factor in the achievement of the Center's goal is the quality of the social interaction as the
tool for fostering optimal development. When referring to social interaction, we are talking
about sensitive and warm human relationships established between caregivers and children, as
well as among the children. These interactions are always mediated by language and reach far
within intimacy of children's families. The nature of these interactions, characterized by their
incursions on children's and caregivers' zones of proximal development, provide ample
opportunities for the children and the caregivers to become active agents in the promotion of
their own developmental process. The idea of the active human being is indeed a Vygostkian
conception. A careful reading of Vygotsky's works (1962, 1978) points toward the proactive
nature of children and adults, whom by virtue of their activities within the social milieu,
elaborate solutions to a diverse variety of tasks and problems,that in this case are socio-cognitive
and developmental.
The concept of inclusion
Inclusion is new pedagogical concept in the United States and Puerto Rico. It emerges from
the legal right to integration of exceptional citizens in their least restrictive environment (Hehir
& Latus, 1992). Integration was established by federal law in the United States through The
Individual with Disabilities Act (IDEA, PL101-476). Nevertheless, two other important pieces of
legislation, The Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights PCI (PL101- 496) as
well as The American with Disabilities Act (ADA, PL101-336) also guaranty the social and
academic integration of exceptional citizens (Rogers,1993). In educational establishments,
integration embodies the right of exceptional children to be included with, and socially interact
with typical peers of their own age. Therefore, inclusion is much more than having the special
child in the classroom. Inclusion requires that the child be treated as a typical child except in
those areas in which special attention is required. Vygotsky anticipated the concept of inclusion
when he suggested that handicapped children needed to be educated together with typical
children in challenging social environments. Tudge (1990, p.158) has pointed out that "...just as
ontogenetic development is dependent upon the broad social and cultural conditions in society
that have developed over time, so children's microgenetic development is dependent upon
particular interactions they have with others". In the case of the present conceptual framework,
adopting the Vygotskian point of view implies educating atypical infants and toddlers together
and in challenging interaction with their typical peers.
Development in the early years
According to the Vygotskian socio-historical point of view, development is intertwined with
learning from the child's first days of life (Vygotsky, 1978, p.84). However, learning as a form
of social transaction with more competent peers and adults, is always ahead of development,
exerting an overwhelming influence on its accomplishment. Vygotsky proposed the concept of
the zone of proximal development to account for the performance difference between the actual
and the next developmental level. Even though this concept was originally concerned with
instruction and schooling (Tudge, 1990), it is also pertinent within the context of a
developmental program for infants and toddlers. If we accept Vygotsky's notion that "human
learning presupposes a specific social nature as a process by which children grow into the
intellectual life of those around them" (Vygotsky, 1978, p.88), then it is necessary to extend and
apply the zone of proximal development to the education of infants and toddlers, focusing on the
nature and quality of the interaction of children among themselves and with the caregivers.
Human development is indeed, an active process of internal transformation of structures and
functions. This process is multidirectional, dialectical, and continuous, taking place within the
context of a particular set of socio-historical dimensions, that are also dialectical and dynamic.
This process is strongly influenced by three factors: (1) the activities that human beings
generate as they interact with the social environment from birth; (2) the cultural
expectations and demands within a particular socio-historical context;(3) the biological
dimensions (Molina Iturrondo, in press). These three factors interact among themselves,
creating a complex array of reciprocal influences on the cognitive as well as socio-affective
dimensions of the human development process.
Cognition and language in the early years
Early mastery of language is perhaps the fundamental developmental accomplishment taking
place in the first years of life. Therefore, it is a key component in the conceptual framework we
have conceptualized. According to the Vygotskian point of view, the significance of early
language development probably emerges from the strong influence it exerts on the configuration
of incipient thought processes. Ontogenetically, language starts off as a social phenomena, with
a different genetic root from that of thought. Language is then internalized by the young child,
thus providing the basic structures that eventually give form to verbal language and conceptual
thought. Its our contention that the role of language in early development of infants and toddlers,
in its oral and written expression should not be underestimated.
The research literature abundantly documents the exquisite relationship that seems to exist
between frequent dialogic story reading with young children (Valdez-Menchaca & Whitehurst,
1992), and their cognitive, linguistic and metalinguistic development (Dickinson & Smith, 1994;
Phillips & McNaughton, 1990; Whitehurst, Falco, Fischel, Debarsyshe, Valdez-Menchaca &
Caulfield, 1988). Contemporary research literature also points toward the intimate relationship
and continuity that seems to exist between the development of oral and written language in the
preschool years (Kavanagh, 1991; Snow, 1983; Snow, Cancino, Ganz_lez & Shriberg, 1989).
My own research in progress, a longitudinal case study on the origins and evolution of literacy in
early childhood, has documented the powerful influence that dialogic story reading and the
creative exploration of the written language, has exerted on one five-year-old girl's cognitive and
linguistic developmental history since infancy (Molina Iturrondo, 1994). The early exploration
writing has the potential for allowing very young children to discover its symbolic function. This
process eventually evolves from a first to a second order of symbolism which requires the
exercise of sophisticated cognitive processes that only have their true meaning within the social
context where they are used. As Vygotsky (1978, 116) suggested, children's meaningful and
playful engagement in literacy writing activities should be a "natural" component of early
childhood education. Since for preschoolers, reading and writing are located in their zones of
proximal development, these activities as creative and playful explorations need to be integrated
in developmental programs for children as young as infants and toddlers.
Play and its role in early optimal development and learning.
Play is probably the activity that best defines childhood in eastern societies. As natural and
spontaneous act, it emerges during the first year of life as a sensorimotor action. Eventually,
sensorimotor play evolves into dramatic play. According to Vygotsky (1978, p.94), emerging
dramatic play is not symbolic from the start, but it allows the child to realize tendencies and
desires that cannot be gratified in any other way.
The Vygotskian point of view stresses the relationship between play, cognition and affective
dimensions of development. But play is much more in the sense that it fosters an internal
transformation in children (Vygotsky, 1978, p.101) that is fundamental in the developmental
process. The reason is that play is an activity that also belongs into the zone of proximal
development. As Vygotsky indicated, "In play, a child always behaves beyond his average age,
above his daily behavior; in play it is as though he were a bit taller than himself" (Vygotsky,
1978, p.102). Therefore, in the present conceptual framework, play becomes the best mean
through which foster optimal development in the infants and toddlers, regardless of their
developmental levels.
Final comments
The present conceptual framework, elaborated in an unpublished document (Molina Iturondo,
Alonso Amador, Velez Vega & Gonzalez, 1994), represents a deliberate effort to provide
theoretical guidance to the education of infants and toddlers in inclusion and regular programs in
Puerto Rico. Modalities of educational interventions with infants and toddlers are very recent in
Puerto Rico. Too frequently these interventions have been a theoretical, focusing only on the
child care dimension. Through this conceptual framework, we hope to bring to light and openly
discuss the urgency of adopting a socio-historical stance on early childhood education,that
promises to be fruitful for enhancing all children's optimal development.
References
Dickinson, D.K. & Smith, M.W. (1994). Long-term effects of preschool teachers' book
readings on low-income children's vocabulary and story comprehension. (1994). Reading
Research Quarterly, 29(2), 105-122.
Hehir T. & Latus,T.(1992). Special education at the century's end: Evolution, theory and
practice since 1970. Cambridge, MA: Harvard ducational Review Reprint Series.
Kavanagh, J.F. (Ed.).(1991). The language continuum. Sydney: Ashton Scholastic.
Molina Iturrondo, A. (in press).Marco conceptual para la transformaci_n de la educaci_n
preescolar en el n_cleo escolar.R_o Piedras, PR:La Organizaci_n para el Fomento del Desarrollo
del Pensamiento, Inc.
Molina Iturrondo, A. (1994). [La evoluci_n temprana de la lecto- _escritura como proceso
integrado en el desarrollo desde la infancia hasta los a_os preescolares: un estudio de caso].
Datos crudos in_ditos.
Molina Iturrondo, A., Alonso Amador, A., Velez Vega, C.M. & Gonz_lez, M.I.(1994). Marco
conceptual para un curr_culo de inclusi_n para infantes y maternales. Manuscrito in_dito,
Universidad de Puerto Rico, Recinto de Ciencias M dicas, R_o Piedras.
Phillips, G. & McNaugthon, S. (1990). The practice of storybook reading to preschool
children in mainstream New Zealand families. Reading Research Quarterly, 25(3), 1997-212.
Rogers, J. (1993, May). The inclusion revolution. Research Bulletin. Bloomington, IN: Phi
Delta Kappa, Center for Evaluation, Development and Research, 1-6.
Snow, C.E. Literacy and language: Relationship during the preschool years. Harvard
Educational Review, 53, 165-189.
Snow, C. E., Cancino H., Gonz_lez, P. & Shriberg, E. (1989). Giving formal definition: An
oral language correlate of school literacy. In D. Bloome (Ed.), Classrooms and literacy (pp.233-
249). Hillsdale, NJ:Ablex.
Tudge, J. (1990). Vygotsky, the zone of proximal development and peer collaboration:
Implications for classroom practice. In L.C. Moll (Ed.), Vygotsky and education (pp.155-172).
New York: Cambridge University Press.
Valdez-Menchaca, M.C. & Whitehurst, G.J. (1992). Accelerating language development
through picture book reading: A systematic extension to day care. Developmental Psychology,
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Vygotsky, L.S. (1962). Thought and language. Cambridge, MA: The MIT press.
Vygotsky, L.S. (1978). Mind and society: The development of higher mental processes.
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Caulfield,M. (1988). Accelerating language development through picture book reading.
Developmental Psychology, 24(4), 552-559.
Sociocultural Approaches to Learning and Development:
A Vygotskian Framework
Vera John-Steiner and Holbrook Mahn University of New Mexico
(A paper submitted to a special issue of Educational Psychologist on theoretical approaches to
learning and their implications for the classroom)
Abstract
Socio-cultural approaches emphasize the interdependence of social and individual processes
in the co-construction of knowledge. This article uses three central tenets of a Vygotskian
framework to examine the relationship between learning and development: (a) social
sources of individual development, (b) semiotic (signs and symbols, including language)
mediation in human development, and (c) genetic (developmental) analysis. The role
played by culture and language in human development is an essential aspect of the
Vygotskian framework and provides an overarching theme for this article. The
methodological foundation of this framework is examined, particularly as it contrasts with
other perspectives on the process of internalization of social interaction in the construction of
knowledge. The article concludes by surveying socio-cultural research on and applications to
classroom learning and teaching, particularly that which examines the role of collaboration. It is
significant that this special issue of Educational Psychologist contains an article on socio-
cultural theory on the centenary of the birth of its founder, the Russian psychologist Lev
Vygotsky. In the last few decades there has been increasing interest in this theory and its
implications for research on classroom learning and teaching. There is a range of interpretations
and applications of socio-cultural approaches, reflecting the vitality of this perspective.1
Nevertheless, some common assumptions of the sociocultural community have been refined and
clarified by contemporary scholars based on Vygotsky's original writings. A number of sources
provide overviews of these approaches and reflect the varied interpretations of Vygotsky's
theory (van der Veer & Valsiner, 1991; Wertsch, 1985, 1991; Cole & Scribner, 1978; John-
Steiner & Souberman, 1978).
To examine the central concepts of sociocultural theory the methodological foundations
should be analyzed. The dialectical method Vygotsky used differentiates it from other
perspectives presented in this issue. We focus on the differences between social constructivist
and sociocultural approaches since these two perspectives are often associated, resulting in
confusion about their similarities and differences.
This article consists of three main sections: 1) a brief overview of sociocultural approaches; 2)
an examination of sociocultural methodology; and 3) an overview of sociocultural contributions
to research and applications to classroom learning and teaching. An overarching focus is the
interdependence of social and individual processes in the co-construction of knowledge. This
focus clarifies the differences between sociocultural theories based on Vygotsky's contributions
and other perspectives reviewed in this issue.
An Overview of Sociocultural Theory
Sociocultural approaches to learning and development were first systematized and
applied by L. S. Vygotsky and his collaborators in Russia in the nineteen-twenties and
thirties. They are based on the concept that human activities take place in cultural
contexts, are mediated by language and other symbol systems, and can be best understood
when investigated in their historical development. At a time when psychologists were intent
on developing simple explanations of human behavior, Vygotsky developed a rich, multifaceted
theory through which he examined a range of subjects including the psychology of art; language
and thought; and learning and development, including a focus on the education of students with
special needs. However, his work was suppressed for 20 years and did not become accessible
again until the late fifties and early sixties. Since then, sociocultural approaches have gained
increasing recognition and have been further developed by scholars in over a dozen countries.
Contemporary interpretations and reinterpretations of Vygotsky's and his collaborators' work
reflect the visibility and obscurity of this theory's sixty-year existence. The expansions and
interpretations in the last 25 years have led to diverse perspectives on sociocultural theory.
The dissemination of Vygotsky's ideas and the application of his work in diverse national
contexts have contributed to "a complex of related but heterogeneous proposals" (Rogoff,
Radziszewska, & Masiello, 1995, p. 125). Vygotsky's ideas are condensed, and at times not fully
developed as he died at a young age of tuberculosis. Much of his work remains untranslated into
English. In spite of these difficulties, his theories are increasingly influential in Western
countries. The impact of Vygotsky's ideas has grown substantially in the United States,
particularly since the publication of a selection of his writings in Mind in Society in 1978.
The power of Vygotsky's ideas lies in his explanation of the dynamic interdependence of
social and individual processes. He arrived at his views by analyzing the crisis in psychology he
saw in the two predominant schools in the field, "each of which claim[ed] to possess an
explanatory system adequate to become the basis of general psychology" (Kozulin, 1990, p. 87).
In contrast to those approaches which focused on internal or subjective experience and
behaviorist approaches which focused on the external, Vygotsky conceptualized development as
the transformation of socially shared activities into internalized processes. In this way he
rejected the Cartesian dichotomy between the internal and the external.
The nature of the interdependence between individual and social processes in the construction
of knowledge can be clarified by examining three major themes in Vygotsky's writings
highlighted by Wertsch (1991): 1) individual development, including higher mental
functioning, has its origins in social sources; 2) human action, on both the social and
individual planes, is mediated by tools and signs; and 3) the first two themes are best
examined through genetic, or developmental, analysis. In developing these themes, we will
rely on Vygotsky's writings as well as the elaborations of his ideas by his coworkers and
scholars influenced by his work.
Social Sources of Development
Human development starts with dependence on caregivers. The developing individual relies
on the vast pool of transmitted experiences of others. Vygotsky in his well-known "genetic law
of development" emphasizes this primacy of social interaction in human development:
Every function in the cultural development of the child comes on the stage twice, in two
respects; first in the social, later in the psychological, first in relations between people as an
interpsychological category, afterwards within the child as an interpsychological
category....All higher psychological functions are internalized relationships of the social
kind, and constitute the social structure of personality. (In Valsiner, 1987, p. 67)
This principle describes a process situated in, but not limited to, social interaction. When
beginning an activity, learners depend on others with more experience. Over time, they take on
increasing responsibility for their own learning and participation in joint activity (Lave &
Wenger, 1991). Expanding Vygotsky's genetic law of development, Rogoff characterizes this
process as guided participation. In her cross-cultural studies, she documents children's varying
forms of participation with parents and peers. Rogoff (1990) found that even when children were
not conversational partners with adults, they were involved in the adult world as participants in
adult agricultural and household work. She describes the supportive engagement of Mayan
mothers with their children as an example of the nonverbal guidance adults give children, .
The routine arrangements and interactions between children and their caregivers and
companions provide children with thousands of opportunities to observe and participate in the
skilled activities of their culture. Through repeated and varied experience in supported routine
and challenging situations, children become skilled practitioners in the specific cognitive
activities in their communities. (1991, p. 351)
Thus learners participate in a wide variety of joint activities which provide the opportunity for
synthesizing several influences into the learner's novel modes of understanding and
participation. By internalizing the effects of working together, the novice acquires useful
strategies and crucial knowledge.
The acquisition of language provides another example of a social source of development.
Zukow-Goldring and Ferko (1994) and other researchers have shown the close relationship
between promoting shared attention between beginning speakers and their caregivers and
the emergence of the lexicon. Contemporary research supports the sociocultural claim that
the relationship between individuals forms a basis for cognitive and linguistic mastery.
This process, whether in the classroom or elsewhere, includes transmission, construction,
transaction, and transformation in a continuing, complex interplay.
Semiotic Mediation
Semiotic mediation is key to all aspects of knowledge co-construction. For Vygotsky,
semiotic mechanisms (including psychological tools) mediate social and individual functioning,
and connect the external and the internal, the social and the individual (Wertsch and Stone,
1985). Vygotsky (1981) listed a number of examples of semiotic means: "language; various
systems of counting; mnemonic techniques; algebraic symbol systems; works of art;
writing; schemes, diagrams, maps and mechanical drawings; all sorts of conventional signs
and so on" (p. 137). Other tools, increasingly recognized in sociocultural discourse -- the
paint brush, the computer, calendars, and symbol systems -- are central to the
appropriation of knowledge through representational activity by the developing individual.
In the introduction to Vygotsky's Thought and Language , Jerome Bruner (1962)
described Vygotsky's view of the role of semiotic mediation:
He believed that in mastering nature we master ourselves. For it is the internalization of overt
action that makes thought, and particularly the internalization of external dialogue that brings the
powerful tool of language to bear on the stream of thought. Man, if you will, is shaped by the
tools and instruments that he comes to use, and neither the mind nor the hand alone can amount
to much....And if neither hand nor intellect alone prevails, the tools and aids that do are the
developing streams of internalized language and conceptual thought that sometimes run parallel
and sometimes merge, each affecting the other. (p. vii)
Wertsch (1991) adopts Wittgenstein's metaphor of a socially provided tool kit of semiotic
means. Those means and practices, which become internalized and available for independent
activity, are critical in supporting and transforming mental functioning. Physical tools are
directed toward the external world; psychological tools are directed internally and are
appropriated during activity.
Knowledge is not internalized directly, but through the use of psychological tools. Vygotsky's
colleague Leontiev (1981) used the term appropriation to describe the adoption by an individual
of one of these socially available psychological tools and wrote that children cannot and need
not reinvent the artifacts that have taken millennia to evolve in order to appropriate such objects
into their own system of activity. The child has only come to an understanding that is adequate
for using the culturally elaborated object in the novel life circumstances he encounters. (Quoted
in Newman, Griffin, & Cole, 1989, p. 63)
Leinhardt (1996) in her discussion of teaching--instructional explanations of
mathematical concepts provides another example of semiotic mediation. In describing the
role of representations, she illustrates the concept of "percent" by discussing various
representations, such as number lines, circles and squares. Representational activities,
whether in the form of inner speech, imagery, or kinetic concepts are linked to culturally
shared systems, such as language, and to developmental activities including scaffolding 2
(John-Steiner, 1995).
Thus, psychological tools are not invented by the individual in isolation. They are products of
sociocultural evolution to which individuals have access by being actively engaged in the
practices of their communities. In a recent article, Wertsch (1994) elaborates on the centrality of
mediation in understanding Vygotsky's contributions to psychology and education.
[Mediation] is the key in his approach to understanding how human mental functioning
is tied to cultural, institutional, and historical settings since these settings shape and
provide the cultural tools that are mastered by individuals to form this functioning. In this
approach, the mediational means are what might be termed the "carriers" of sociocultural
patterns and knowledge. (p. 204)
Cognitive pluralism.
Although the importance of semiotic mediation in thinking is recognized by most members of
the sociocultural thought community, interpretations of it differ. Almost all sociocultural
researchers place language in a central position; however, some consider that other semiotic
means are of little theoretical interest (Kozulin, 1990). We claim a pluralistic rather than a
monistic theory of semiotic mediation (John-Steiner, 1991; 1995) and have coined the term
cognitive pluralism for this stance. Evidence for cognitive pluralism includes the planning
notes of experienced thinkers which incorporate words, drawings, musical notes, and
scientific diagrams (John-Steiner, 1985).
The diversity of these means and the psychological tools that they represent are of
special interest to educators who work in multicultural settings and with children who
have special needs. In an issue of the Educational Psychologist devoted to Vygotsky's ideas,
Boris Gindis (1995) describes the emphasis Vygotsky placed on the variety of psychological
tools in approaching the study of children who had special physical or mental
circumstances. "Vygotsky pointed out that our civilization has already developed different
means (e.g. Braille system, sign language, lip-reading, finger spelling, etc.) to accommodate
a handicapped child's unique way of acculturation through acquiring various symbol
systems" (p. 79).
These acts of representation are embedded in social practice and rely on socially
developed semiotic means. Ecology, history, culture, and family organization play roles in
patterning experience and events in the creation of knowledge (John-Steiner, 1995). For
example, the tasks confronting children, such as learning to talk, to walk, and to attach
meaning to their experiences are reflected in cognitive strategies, derived in part from the
culturally patterned environment into which they are born. Their thought is shaped by the
prevalent methods of physical and economic survival, by the language and visual symbols
used by their people, and by socially ordered ways of parenting. Some children who are
born into tribal or agricultural communities spend many hours strapped to the back of
their mothers and other caregivers. In this position, they observe and represent the life of
their community in a way that is not possible to children who are placed in cribs and
playpens (John-Steiner, 1985)
Representational activities and the sociocultural theory of semiotic mediation are fundamental
to Vygotsky's concept of internalization and the transformation of interpersonal processes into
intrapersonal ones. Vygotsky used the concept of semiotic mediation to explain qualitative
transformations in the human mind historically, ontogenetically, and microgenetically. The
role played by semiotic mediation in the development of higher psychological processes
provided a central focus for Vygotsky's research. The concept of semiotic mediation is
essential to the sociocultural view that the process of internalization is transformative
rather than transmissive.
Genetic Analysis
Vygotsky used genetic analysis which examines the origins and the history of phenomena,
focusing on their interconnectedness , to develop his theoretical framework and guide his
research. In describing this approach he emphasized the need to concentrate not on the product
of development but on the very process by which higher forms are established....To study
something historically means to study it in the process of change; that is the dialectical
method's basic demand. To encompass in research the process of a given thing's
development in all its phases and changes --from birth to death -- fundamentally means to
discover its nature, its essence, for "it is only in movement that a body shows what it is."
Thus, the historical (that is in the broadest sense of history) study of behavior is not an
auxiliary aspect of theoretical study, but rather forms its very base. (Vygotsky, 1978, pp.
64-65)
According to this perspective, learning and development take place in socially and culturally
shaped contexts. Historical conditions are constantly changing, resulting in changed contexts and
opportunities for learning. For that reason, there can be no universal schema that adequately
represents the dynamic relation between external and internal aspects of development (John-
Steiner & Souberman, 1978).
Vygotsky argued that psychological systems that unite separate functions into new
combinations and complexes arise in the process of development. An example of this unification
is the linking of spoken and written language into a new and broader semiotic system. When it
was discovered that it was "possible to represent the sounds of language using marks in clay just
as it is possible to represent objects" (Cole, 1990, p. 95), a qualitative transformation in the
development of humanity occurred. The unification of separate functions represented in literacy
also provides insights into the relationships between individual and social processes.
In his studies of disabilities, Vygotsky analyzed the unification of separate physiological
(anatomical, biochemical, and evolving neural) and psychological processes. His collaborator,
neuropsychologist Alexander Luria (1973, 1979) examined cognitive functions in brain damage
at different levels of analysis. This led to the concept of functional systems which is particularly
useful in the examination of phenomena at the interface of neural and cognitive processes.
Functional systems are dynamic psychological systems in which diverse internal and external
processes are coordinated and integrated. These systems reveal a variety of characteristics
including the use of variable means or mechanisms by individuals to perform particular tasks. In
order to succeed when faced with new learning challenges, these individuals reorganize their
cognitive strategies. Cole and Scribner (1974) used the concept of functional systems
extensively in their cross-cultural research, as did Newman, Griffin, & Cole (1989), who found
that "[E]xternal devices like talk and charts and writing are windows in the evolution and
appearance of cognitive constructs. They are an essential part of the functional system that gives
the actors as well as the analysts access to the changes occurring" (p. 73).
Functional system analysis captures the dynamic relationship between changing and stable
features of phenomena and the ways in which these are integrated in different contexts. In work
with Native American children, John-Steiner and Osterreich (1975) found it particularly useful
in examining the children's use of various learning styles and modalities to accomplish similar
goals and tasks. A functional systems approach helped analyze Native American children's
learning approaches, viewing them as part of a dynamic system instead of splitting them into
visual and verbal approaches.
Within genetic analysis the use of functional systems provides a framework for representing
the complex interrelationships between external devices, psychological tools, the individual, and
the social world. Vygotsky used the sociocultural framework based on the three central tenets
described above -- social sources of development, semiotic mediation, and genetic analysis -- to
develop his concept of internalization.
Vygotsky's Methodological Approach
An understanding of Vygotsky's methodological approach helps to clarify the concept of
internalization and to differentiate it from other theoretical perspectives. Vygotsky approached
methodological issues on two interrelated levels -- the theoretical and the psychological. On the
theoretical level he examined complex systems in the process of change, using dialectical logic
to understand the interrelationships between components of the systems. On the psychological
level he chose research methods to capture the dynamics of process consistent with his
theoretical approach. On both levels his emphasis was on the examination of cognitive change in
diverse contexts. "Any psychological process, whether the development of thought or voluntary
behavior, is a process undergoing changes right before one's eyes" (Vygotsky, 1978, p. 61) To
capture the processes at play, Vygotsky used the experimental-developmental method in which
developmental changes are provoked in laboratory settings. Through intervention, the
experimenter is able to record participants' initial efforts to solve a problem beyond their existing
means or strategies. One of the intervention methods was providing auxiliary means through
which the problem could be solved. This type of mediated assistance was of theoretical and
methodological interest to Vygotsky. In studying memory in complex choice responses, he
focused on the developmental changes taking place in the course of one or several sessions
during which the learner appropriates new psychological tools.
Contemporary Vygotskian scholars researching cognitive change in classroom learning rely
on both experimental and qualitative methods to focus on developmental processes.
Sociocultural researchers reject "the cause-effect, stimulus-response, explanatory science in
favor of a science that emphasizes the emergent nature of mind in activity and that
acknowledges a central role for interpretation in its explanatory framework" (Cole, 1996).
Vygotskian researchers use this theoretical and methodological approach to study and
describe the concept of internalization. This is germane to the discussion on classroom learning
and teaching in this issue of the Educational Psychologist. There is a vigorous discussion among
sociocultural theorists and proponents of differing theoretical perspectives about the way that
concepts are learned and the processes through which they are acquired, appropriated, or
internalized. These processes cannot be adequately understood, we believe, without
comprehending the dialectical method Vygotsky used to examine them. This section presents
Vygotsky's use of the dialectical method, explains the authors' conception of internalization, and
distinguishes sociocultural concepts of internalization from other perspectives.
Dialectical Method
Vygotsky did not simply try to impose laws or principles of dialectics on existing
psychological theories, rather he scientifically investigated and analyzed concrete questions in
specific areas of psychological inquiry. This approach was described by one of his collaborators,
Leontiev (1977), who wrote that in science "dialectic logic does not amount to just the
formalistic imposition of its principles on any particular scientific discipline. It itself develops as
scientific inquiry proceeds; it is the result of empirical science"(p. 54). Vygotsky underscored
the centrality of this method to all of his work. "The search for method becomes one of the
most important problems of the entire enterprise of understanding the uniquely human forms
of psychological activity. In this case, the method is simultaneously prerequisite and product,
the tool and the result of the study..."(Vygotsky, 1978, p. 65).
In contrast to Aristotelian logic which placed phenomena, such as mind and matter, into fixed,
unchanging categories, Vygotsky analyzed higher mental functions as developmental processes
in a constant state of dialectical change. He examined mind and matter in their
interconnectedness and included a "scientific explanation of both external manifestations and the
process under study" (1978, p. 63).
A central concept of dialectics, the unification of contradictions, distinguishes it from
traditional approaches. "Whereas, within the standard view, conceptual unity among objects
relies on the commonality of elements, it is the interrelatedness of diverse elements and the
integration of opposites that creates unity within dialectics" (Falmagne, 1995, p. 207). Dialectics
surmounts dichotomies by looking at phenomena as syntheses of contradictions. In twentieth
century physics, it was the unified vision of light as both wave and particle that led to a broader
theoretical understanding. In nature, qualitative transformations unify contradictions -- water, for
example, as unification of hydrogen and oxygen will go through transformations from gas to
liquid to solid with quantitative changes in temperature. Additionally, physical tools can unify
contradictory functions -- the claw hammer is used to both pound in and pull out nails; the pencil
is used to create and erase (Weber, 1992).
Vygotsky (1986) used the dialectical notion of synthesis to analyze a central psychological
tool -- verbal thought. He examined the way that thought and speech, which initially have
separate planes or levels of development in children in a "prelinguistic period in thought and a
preintellectual period of speech," become inextricably intertwined (p. 210). Throughout his work
Vygotsky uses the dialectical method to analyze, explain, and describe interrelationships
fundamental to human development where others posited dichotomies -- for example, mind and
matter, language and thought, external and inner speech, nature and culture, and social and
individual processes in the construction of knowledge.
Our concept of development implies a rejection of the frequently held view that cognitive
development results from the gradual accumulation of separate changes. We believe that child
development is a complex dialectical process characterized by periodicity, unevenness in the
development of different functions, metamorphosis or qualitative transformation of one form
into the other, intertwining of external and internal factors, and adaptive processes which
overcome impediments that the child encounters. (Vygotsky, 1978, p. 73)
Using this approach, sociocultural theorists analyze internalization and individual and social
processes as interrelated parts of neurophysiological, psychological, educational, political, and
cultural systems (Tobach, 1995).
Internalization
Our concept of internalization recognizes unique human minds which owe their existence to
and are inextricably intertwined with social, historical, cultural, and material processes
(including brain activities). Internalization is conceived of as a representational activity, a
process that occurs simultaneously in social practice and in the human brain/mind. Sociocultural
researchers include the learners' appropriation of socially elaborated symbol systems as a critical
aspect of learning-driven development. This appropriation of symbol systems was a central
focus of Vygotsky's work, particularly as applied to educational pedagogy, and led to his most
fully elaborated application of the concept of internalization -- the transformation of
communicative language into inner speech and further into verbal thinking (Vygotsky, 1986, Ch.
7).
Although "cognitive constructivist research and practice...is mostly oriented toward
understanding the individual learner" (Derry, 1996, this issue) and separates individual processes
of knowledge construction from social processes of joint understanding, we think of them as
connected and interdependent. The development of the mind of the child is both individual and
social at the same time and is the result of a long process of developmental events (Vygotsky,
1978). A focus of sociocultural research is the study of the way that the co-construction of
knowledge is internalized, appropriated, transmitted, or transformed in formal and informal
learning settings.
Vygotsky examined and explained the processes through which humans construct minds in
interaction with the external world of nature and with other humans, changing in the process
both themselves and nature.
The dialectical approach, while admitting the influence of nature on man, asserts that man, in
turn, affects nature and creates through his changes in nature new natural conditions for his
existence. This position is the keystone of our approach to the study and interpretation of man's
higher psychological functions and serves as the basis for the new methods of experimentation
and analysis we advocate. (Vygotsky, 1978. pp. 60-61)
The Russian philosopher, E. V. Ilyenkov adds that "the socio-historical environment, the
world of things, created by human labour, and the system of human relations, formed in the
process of labour" must also be considered, and that "outside the individual lies not only nature
as such ('in itself'), but also humanized nature, nature remade by human labour" (Bakhurst, 1995,
p. 165).
In a psychological framework the unification of nature and culture is powerfully embodied in
early development. For example, a human embryo is both a material and a conceptual reality for
the mother, but its own consciousness is dependent upon the full (prenatal and postnatal)
development of the infant's own nervous system and his or her subsequent internalization of
culturally developed sign systems. Bakhurst (1995) writes that "the nature and content of an
individual's mental life cannot be understood independently of the culture of which that
individual is part" (p. 159). He further suggests that there are two intuitions which lie behind the
claims of "strong cultural theories of the mind":
The first is that meaning is the medium of the mental, and meaning is (in some sense) socially
constructed; the second is that the human mind, and the forms of talk in which human beings
explain and predict the operations of minds, should be understood on the model of tools, and like
all artifacts, we cannot make sense of them independently of the social processes which make
them what they are. (p. 159)
Lemke (1995) poses the contradictory character of the relationship between individual and
social processes in the making of meaning: "how to have an active, creative human subject
which constructs social meanings, at the same time that this subject itself must be a social
construction" (p. 80). Vygotsky's use of dialectics to unravel this contradictory relationship
between individual and social processes in which the individual constructs the social and at the
same time is constructed by the social distinguishes the sociocultural perspective from others
presented in this issue. We favor the view of Penuel and Wertsch (1995) that "sociocultural
processes on the one hand and individual functioning on the other [exist] in a dynamic,
irreducible tension rather than a static notion of social determination. A sociocultural
approach...considers these poles of sociocultural processes and individual functioning as
interacting moments in human action, rather than as static processes that exist in isolation from
one another" (p. 84).
Distinctions from Other Perspectives
The way in which internalization has been interpreted by a variety of critics highlights the
distinctions between sociocultural and other approaches. For example, social constructivist
critics of the Vygotskian framework such as Cobb & Yackel (1996) characterize it in this issue
of Educational Psychologist as a transmission model through which students inherit the cultural
meanings that constitute their intellectual bequest from prior generations. Their position is both
linked to and differentiated from a Vygotskian stand when they question the metaphor "of
students and teachers being embedded or included in social practice" (Cobb, Wood, & Yackel,
1993, p. 96). Although their emergent approach has many commonalities with sociocultural
theory, Cobb and Yackel repeatedly criticize the latter as a transfer-of-knowledge model where
students imitate "established mathematical practices" (1996,). This interpretation of sociocultural
theory reduces and simplifies the mutuality of learning, and its interpersonal and
intergenerational dynamic. In attempting to differentiate their approaches from sociocultural
theory, social constructivists misinterpret the transformative character of internalization as
described by sociocultural researchers (John-Steiner, 1996).
The conceptualization of internalization as unidirectional transmission freezes the debate, in
part, by distorting sociocultural theorists' views of the roles of both teacher and student. It does
not recognize that the sociocultural theory of internalization analyzes the complex process of
transmission, transformation, and synthesis in the co-construction of knowledge. As Leontiev
wrote, "the process of internalization is not the transferal of an external activity to a preexisting
internal 'plane of consciousness': it is the process in which this plane is formed" (Wertsch &
Stone, 1985, p. 163). In classroom learning the student plays an active role and constantly
informs the teacher as their mutual negotiation and collaboration build knowledge.
As well as the presentation of new information, there needs to be extended opportunity for
discussion and problem-solving in the context of shared activities, in which meaning and action
are collaboratively constructed and negotiated. In other words, education must be thought of in
terms not of the transmission of knowledge but of transaction and transformation. (Chang-Wells
& Wells, 1993, p. 59)
We will explore other studies of classroom collaboration exhibiting transformative knowledge
co-construction later in this article.
There are different modes of internalization, reflecting different teaching/interaction
strategies. A continuum with direct instruction on one end to creative and collaborative learning
on the other could describe the wide range of teaching/learning situations in which
internalization occurs. Whether in the learning of a young child or in the activities of
experienced thinkers, internalization is a fundamental part of the life-long process of the co-
construction of knowledge and the creation of the new.
Other critics warn that using the concept of internalization to explain the learning processes
creates the danger of focusing on just the individual mental construction of knowledge. For
example, Martin Packer's (1993) analysis, which is linked to an hermeneutic, interpretive
approach, suggests that "Descartes' ghost may still be with us" (p. 263), because he sees
elements of dualism in sociocultural concepts of internalization. While he appreciates the work
of Vygotskian scholars, Packer is concerned that "the processes and mechanisms being
examined keep creeping back inside the head" (p. 263). In contrasting the view of learning as
mental change with an alternative which focuses on participatory activities, his analysis is
similar to that of Barbara Rogoff (1994) who writes that "learning is a process of transforming
participation in shared sociocultural endeavors "(p. 210).
In our view, internalization is simultaneously a social and an individual process. In working
with, through, and beyond what they have appropriated in social participation and then
internalized, individuals co-construct new knowledge. In contrast to facile internalization which
leads to a limited combination of ideas, internalization that involves sustained social and
individual endeavors becomes a constituent part of the interaction with what is known and leads
to the creation of new knowledge. Chang-Wells & Wells (1993) in their study of the role of
instructional conversations in classroom learning describe this interdependent and transformative
view of internalization: "...[I]t is at points of negotiation of meaning in conversation that learning
and development occur, as each learner's individual psychological processes mediate (and at the
same time are mediated by) the constitutive intermental processes of the group" (p. 86).
Sociocultural approaches are also distinguished from other perspectives by the importance
they place on cultural variation and its interrelationship with development (John-Steiner &
Panofsky, 1992). This distinction is particularly relevant in contrasting sociocultural approaches
with those derived from a Piagetian framework. The emphasis on culture has resulted in the
broad use by sociocultural researchers of approaches which examine the ways in which learning
and teaching take place under differing cultural circumstances and in differing historical
contexts, contributing to a contextualized rather than a universalistic theory of development. And
while social constructivists do engage in an analysis of cultural norms, they maintain a
conceptual dichotomy between the individual's constructive activity on the one hand and social
processes on the other. For example, Cobb and Yackel (1996) view the individual through one
lens and the social through another without making explicit the dialectical interdependence of
social and individual processes. To study these processes interdependently requires a reliance on
cross-cultural comparisons and active collaboration between researchers drawn from varied
backgrounds examining teachers and children in diverse settings.
The significant role of cross-cultural comparisons in theory construction and the development
of educational practice is illustrated by the work of Tharp and Gallimore (1988) and their
collaborators who developed a highly effective, culturally sensitive approach to teaching
Hawaiian children. In their well-known Kamehameha Early Education Program (KEEP)
instructional conversations are designed to resemble the talk story format -- overlapping speech,
joint performance, and informal turn taking -- favored in the native Hawaiian community.
However, when this highly successful program was implemented among Navajo children, the
results were mixed (Jordan, Tharp, & Vogt, 1985). The researchers became aware of the
difficulties in applying a promising culturally sensitive approach from one indigenous context to
another. They found that for Hawaiian children groups of four to five students of mixed sex and
ability produce the maximum peer interaction and learning cooperation. However, Navajo
children were uncomfortable in the larger mixed groups and worked best in dyads of the same
sex. These studies illustrate the importance to sociocultural approaches of inclusion of
anthropologists, Native teachers, and the learners themselves as educational activity planners
whose joint efforts help educators understand the culturally-patterned learning styles children
bring to school. This emphasis upon interdisciplinary action research by Vygotskian educators
contrasts with other approaches in educational psychology.
Sociocultural researchers emphasize methods which document cognitive and social change.
Rather than seeing a dichotomy between quantitative and qualitative research, approaches are
chosen that emphasize process and development and the multiple ways in which both can be
revealed. They include experimental research such as Frauenglass and Diaz's (1985) work on
private speech which studied Vygotsky's hypotheses on the universality and self-regulatory
significance of private speech. In a laboratory setting they "compared the frequencies of
preschoolers' private speech in perceptual versus semantic tasks, with or without instructions that
permitted and encouraged the use of overt verbalizations....[And found] that researchers who
choose to study private speech in laboratory settings must pay close attention to task and setting
variables that may increase or inhibit the amount of private speech produced by children in their
samples" (Diaz, 1992, p. 57). Other sociocultural approaches combine experimental and
ethnographic research as illustrated by Scribner and Cole's (1981) work in Liberia. In their
studies of literacy they include observational and ethnographic methods and combined them with
tasks first developed in laboratory settings. Examples of sociocultural methods of research on
cognitive change in the classroom are described in the next section .
Sociocultural Educational Research and Practice
This section briefly examines Vygotsky's analysis of the relationship between learning and
development, his concept of the zone of proximal development, and implications drawn from
them for research on collaborative learning. Vygotsky's analysis of spontaneous and scientific
concepts is then examined, focusing on the central roles in concept formation played by
language and culture. The integrated influences of culture and language are then examined in
practical applications of sociocultural approaches to classroom learning and teaching in literacy
instruction. An additional and related theme highlighted in this section is the way sociocultural
theory helps educators provide instruction which recognizes and empowers linguistically and
culturally diverse students.
Learning and Development and the Zone of Proximal Development
In contrast to prevailing theories of his time which dichotomized learning and development
viewing one as an external and the other as an internal process, Vygotsky (1978) looked at their
unity and interdependence starting from a child's birth.
Our hypothesis establishes the unity but not the identity of learning processes and internal
developmental processes. It presupposes that the one is converted into the other. Therefore, it
becomes an important concern of psychological research to show how external knowledge and
abilities in children become internalized. (pp. 90-91)
He thus criticized theories such as Piaget's, in which "maturation is viewed as a precondition
of learning but never the result of it" (p. 80) and developed the following position:
...[L]earning awakens a variety of internal developmental processes that are able to operate
only when the child is interacting with people in his environment and in cooperation with his
peers....[L]earning is not development; however, properly organized learning results in mental
development and sets in motion a variety of developmental processes that would be impossible
apart from learning. Thus learning is a necessary and universal aspect of the process of
developing culturally organized, specifically human, psychological functions. (p. 90)
To help explain the way that this social and participatory learning took place, Vygotsky
(1978) developed the concept of the zone of proximal development (ZPD), which he defined as
"...the distance between the actual developmental level as determined through independent
problem solving and the level of potential development as determined through problem solving
under adult guidance or in collaboration with more capable peers" (p. 86). Sociocultural
theorists, expanding the concept of the zone of proximal development, increasingly
conceptualize learning as distributed (Cole & Engeström, 1993), interactive (Chang-Wells &
Wells, 1993), contextual (John-Steiner, Panofsky, & Smith, 1994), and the result of the learners'
participation in a community of practice (Rogoff, 1994).
Ann Brown and her collaborators (1992, 1993) have developed and implemented educational
programs based on this concept of learning. They suggest that the active agents within the zone
of proximal development "can include people, adults and children, with various degrees of
expertise, but it can also include artifacts, such as books, videos, wall displays, scientific
equipment and a computer environment intended to support intentional learning" (1993, p. 191).
In expanding the zone of proximal development to include artifacts in addition to people, Brown
integrates Vygotsky's analyses of tools and symbols with the roles played by the participants in
the learning process. One of the important features of Brown and her collaborators' work is the
examination of the way "divergent classrooms can become learning communities -- communities
in which each participant makes significant contributions to the emergent understandings of all
members, despite having unequal knowledge concerning the topic under study" (Palincsar,
Brown, & Campione, 1993, p. 43). They examine the role of "reciprocal teaching," an approach
in which "students and teachers take turns leading discussions about shared text" (p. 43), to see
whether structured dialogues foster a learning community. The teachers in these studies have a
changing role. They share with the students the well-defined tasks of questioning, clarifying,
summarizing, and predicting in order to construct text-based knowledge. These studies
exemplify two themes in sociocultural approaches to classroom learning and teaching -- (1) the
implementation of an educational program that allows for or encourages the co-construction of
knowledge and (2) the analysis of this learning that contributes to our understanding of
classroom learning from a sociocultural perspective. Collaborative learning plays an increasing
role in these as well as many other innovative classrooms .
Collaboration Research
In current applications of sociocultural theory with emphases on co-participation, cooperative
learning, and joint discovery, teachers bring existing knowledge to students by co-constructing it
with them. These applications have made clear the need to examine patterns of interaction and
collaboration in this type of classroom. A major goal of our current research is to produce a
theoretical model of the collaboration process and to identify collaborator's values, roles,
working methods, and conflict-resolution strategies.3 Through the analysis of selected project
documents and transcribed discourse from group meetings, as well as through focused
interviews, our initial work has revealed four patterns - distributed, complementary, family, and
integrative -- among individual, small groups, and larger complex collaborations (see Figure 1).
We use a circle and dotted lines to show that collaborative efforts are dynamic, changing
processes. While the corresponding characteristics of values, working methods, and roles for
each pattern are depicted in the bands around the wheel, there is no rigidity in the divisions. The
order of the patterns is not hierarchical, and a collaboration can be initiated at any level and be
transformed over time. A goal is to examine how the resolutions of tensions inherent in
collaborations transform the character of the collaboration and determine whether it continues.
In the move from the outer edge of the wheel in Figure 1 to the center, collaborations tend to
be longer term and are characterized by the increasing importance of negotiated and common
values. In distributed collaborations, such as collective e-mail discussions where the exchange of
information is featured, values need not extend beyond similar interests; whereas in integrated
collaborations -- long-term, often dyadic and intimate -- values are reflected in the development
of shared ideologies. Complementary collaborations, such as those found in the organization of
teams in classrooms and in the business world, are distinguished by clear divisions of labor and
discipline-based approaches. In contrast, family collaborations, often centered on providing
social services including education, are characterized by the fluidity of roles and the integration
of expertise.
The conceptualization of the patterns of collaboration in Figure 1 is of use in the study of
classrooms engaged in collaborative learning. Complex social relationships and differing
cultural values will shape the intellectual interdependence in the co-construction of knowledge in
classes which are not based on the traditional teacher-centered transmission model of education.
The way that cultural and linguistic factors shape learning and development and the impact
that these factors have on pedagogical approaches provide a theoretical foundation for
sociocultural research of collaboration in the classroom. There is a growing literature on
cooperative learning and peer collaboration of interest to both Piagetian and Vygotskian
researchers (Damon & Phelps, 1989; Slavin, 1983, 1987; Tudge & Rogoff, 1989) which can
inform classroom practice.
In differentiating their approach from others Forman and McPhail (1993) highlight three
features of a sociocultural perspective on the study of collaboration in education. First, rather
than locating the source of individual motivation and understanding within or between
individuals, they locate it in sociocultural practices in which children have the opportunity "to
observe and participate in essential economic, religious, legal, political, instructional, or
recreational activities." Through guided participation "children internalize or appropriate their
affective, social, and intellectual significance" (p. 218). Second, Forman and McPhail write:
For Vygotsky, cognitive, social, and motivational factors were interrelated in development.
Thus it makes no sense to evaluate the benefits of peer collaboration in purely intellectual terms,
e.g., via individual achievement testing. A Vygotskian perspective also implies that the
outcomes of peer collaboration must be evaluated in context and over time. (p. 218)
The third feature of Forman and McPhail's approach is that discourse analysis can be used to
examine participants' "epistemological and affective dispositions toward collaborative problem
solving. Their discourse should reflect their individual and shared understandings and feelings
about the task setting, as well as the definitions of the activity that are provided by their
particular cultural and historical situation" (pp. 218-219).
Using this framework, Forman and McPhail (1993) examine the ways in which learners assist
each other. Their work, which focuses on dyads engaged in problem-solving activities, illustrates
the complementary pattern of collaboration. The two students in the study, after initial
differences on task definition, developed a division of labor based on areas of expertise reflected
in specialized forms of discourse -- scientific and mathematical. This study highlights the need
to develop joint perspectives over time to achieve shared goals. Forman and McPhail (1993)
emphasize the role of mutuality and the use of specialized forms of discourse "to engage in
logical arguments, to share ideas, and to work together in the pursuit of common goals" (p. 226).
(This finding corresponds to our own, where we have found the importance of trust in the
development of working methods in sustained collaboration.)
A different pattern of collaboration was revealed in Moll & Whitmore's (1993) study of a
bilingual classroom in the Southwestern United States in which reading and writing in two
languages were integrated in project-oriented literacy activities. This study, using a sociocultural
approach, examined the interactive and contextual character of cognitive change as students
created and participated in communities of learners. The collaboration described by Moll and
Whitmore (1993) exemplified the family pattern, with a fluidity of roles and a reliance on
various areas of expertise from the students and the teacher in the joint construction of
knowledge. Because the teachers and children were actively and mutually creating learning
situations, the roles of both were flexible. The children often took the lead in shaping text-related
discussions. The teacher's roles include those of guide and supporter whose "guidance is
purposely mediated, almost hidden, embedded in the activities;" participant in thematic research
activities; evaluator of the students' development; and facilitator and planner who organizes "the
environment, curriculum, and materials to provide functional and purposeful uses for language,
literacy, and learning processes" (p. 38). At the same time the "children have considerable
control of virtually all aspects of their own learning experiences. They select groups, reading
materials, writing topics, theme topics, and language to use for each" (p. 38). Moll and
Whitmore (1993) describe a pattern of collaboration where the development of trust among the
participants is of central concern. These patterns of shared responsibilities in teaching and
learning have contributed to a broadened understanding of the zone of proximal development
and help illustrate the emerging patterns of collaboration shown in Figure 1.
Another example of the family pattern of collaboration is the after-school program known as
the "Fifth Dimension," developed by Michael Cole, Peg Griffin, and their collaborators at the
University of California, San Diego, which brings together children and adolescents, community
institutions, undergraduate students, and researchers. It relies upon computer technology,
collaborative learning, play, and imagination "within the framework of a shared and voluntarily
accepted system of impersonal rules" (Nicolopoulou & Cole, 1993, p. 293). Cole (1995) and his
colleagues have extended Vygotskian analyses of learning beyond the dyadic and small group
level to include an examination of different sites as institutional and cultural contexts for these
activities. The success of the Fifth Dimension is based, in part, on the character of the
collaboration which includes a fluidity of roles across ages and areas of expertise. The
integration of play and learning helps meet the shared goals and objectives of the program. This
innovative, collaborative program contrasts with traditional models of education which isolate
teachers in their classrooms.
Sociocultural research on collaboration also includes examination of the mutual dependence
of teachers engaged in collective activity and dialogue in the process of curriculum innovation.
Yjrö Engeström (1994) in his study of teachers found an additional benefit of collaboration
research:
One of the most persistent methodological difficulties of studying thinking has to do with
access to on-line data from thought processes. When thinking is defined as a private, individual
phenomenon only indirect data is accessible. Thinking embedded in collaborative practical
activity must to a significant degree take the form of talk, gesture, use of artifacts, or some other
publicly accessible mediational instrumentality; otherwise mutual formation of ideas would be
rendered impossible. Collaborative thinking opens up access to direct data on thought processes.
(p. 45)
Teachers in traditional schools often don't have the opportunity to interact with colleagues as
in the Engeström study and thus have "limited opportunities for receiving assistance through
modeling and feedback, two means of assistance crucial to acquisition of complex social
repertoires....necessary to meet the criterion of teaching-as-assisted-performance in the zone of
proximal development" (Gallimore & Tharp, 1990, p. 201).
A particularly powerful example of collaboration, and one that can inform our efforts at
educational reform, is provided by Brazilian teachers who worked together with community
activists to educate previously excluded populations (Souza Lima, 1995). Their local initiatives,
broadened and strengthened through the use of the sociocultural theories of Vygotsky, Wallon,
and Freire, are being applied to citywide and broader reform efforts. Studies of teachers in
dynamic interactions with other teachers, students, researchers, and reformers will be important
in the ongoing sociocultural research into collaboration and educational change.
Spontaneous and Scientific Concepts
In classrooms in which there is co-participation, cooperative learning, and joint discovery,
environments are created in which students are able to build upon the culturally-shaped
knowledge and value systems they bring to school. Vygotsky's analysis of spontaneous and
scientific concepts provides a foundation for examining how children learn before they enter
school and how this knowledge relates to concepts learned at school.
By spontaneous concepts Vygotsky meant concepts that are acquired by the child outside of
the context of explicit instruction. In themselves these concepts are mostly taken from adults, but
they never have been introduced to the child in a systematic fashion and no attempts have been
made to connect them with other related concepts. Because Vygotsky explicitly acknowledged
the role of adults in the formation of these so-called spontaneous concepts he preferred to call
them "everyday" concepts, thus avoiding the idea that they had been spontaneously invented by
the child....By "scientific" concepts Vygotsky meant concepts that had been explicitly introduced
by a teacher at school. Ideally such concepts would cover the essential aspects of an area of
knowledge and would be presented as a system of interrelated ideas. (van der Veer & Vlasiner,
1991, p. 270)
Even though Vygotsky discusses spontaneous and scientific concepts by highlighting their
distinguishing characteristics, he still recognized their interdependence. "We believe that the two
processes -- the development of spontaneous and of nonspontaneous concepts -- are related and
constantly influence each other. They are parts of a single process: the development of concept
formation which is affected by varying external and internal conditions but is essentially a
unitary process, not a conflict of antagonistic, mutually exclusive forms of thinking" (Vygotsky,
1986, p. 157).
The social situatedness of concept formation is studied by Moll (1992) who uses Vygotsky's
analysis to gain insight into providing effective education for linguistically and culturally diverse
students:
One advantage [of a sociocultural approach] is that in studying human beings dynamically,
within their social circumstances, in their full complexity, we gain a much more complete and...a
much more valid understanding of them. We also gain, particularly in the case of minority
children, a more positive view of their capabilities and how our pedagogy often constrains, and
just as often distorts, what they do and what they are capable of doing. (p. 239)
Analyzing how students learn, as well as acknowledging and attempting to understand the
culturally-conditioned knowledge they bring to the classroom, can help lead to effective
teaching. In an ethnographic study looking at how the knowledge that existed in Mexican
American students' households could be used to bring about innovative instructional practice,
Moll & Greenberg (1990) found a variety of "funds of knowledge" ranging from knowledge
"about different soils, the cultivation of plants, and water management...animal husbandry,
veterinary medicine, ranch economy, and mechanics as well as carpentry, masonry, electrical
wiring..." (p. 323). They also found that this knowledge was socially distributed and that a
reciprocal relationship existed between everyday knowledge used to understand school material
and classroom activities used to help students understand social reality. To facilitate this
interaction an after-school lab was created "...within which researchers, teachers, and students
meet to experiment with the teaching of literacy. We think of this lab setting, following
Vygotsky, as a 'mediating' structure that facilitates strategic connections, multiple paths, between
classrooms and household" (p. 320). Without such mediating structures, investigations into
discourse practices in school and home have found that the variations between the two can lead
to problems as students adjust to the requirements of formal education.
In order to understand children in school settings, sociocultural approaches examine the
development of language and the ways that culturally different modes of discourse, both within
and between cultures, shape children's development and impact their educational experiences.
From birth, the social forms of child-caretaker interactions, the tools used by humans in
society to manipulate the environment, the culturally institutionalized patterns of social relations,
and language, operating together as a socio-semiotic system, are used by the child in cooperation
with adults to organize behavior, perception, memory, and complex mental processes. For
children, the development of language is a development of social existence into individuated
persons and into culture. (John-Steiner & Tatter, 1983, p. 83)
The linguist, James Gee (1989) argues that "discourses are intimately related to the
distribution of social power and hierarchical structure in society" (p. 20). The impact of
different, culturally-patterned modes of discourse is felt from the primary grades through higher
education. Michele Minnis (1994) examines the ways in which linguistically and culturally
diverse students are at a disadvantage in law school when faced with the norms of a legal
community indifferent to their culture, discourse, and values. She quotes a Chicana law student:
The game is alien to your upbringing. It is a manipulation of words in a foreign tongue --
words which mystify, manipulation which obscures your search for justice. You will feel as if
you don't belong....Group learning was almost impossible. Most of my classmates were
heartlessly competitive....If I were to call someone ambitious in English, it would be a
compliment. If I were to say the same in Spanish, it would be an insult. (pp. 382-83)
Studies of schooled discourses are of particular interest to contemporary students of education
and development. Some of these discourses are empowering as in the bilingual classroom
studied by Moll and Whitmore (1993); others contribute to the oppression of the silenced
(Belenky, Clinchy, Goldberger, & Tarule, 1986; Cazden, 1988, 1993; Freire, 1970). Gee (1991)
drawing on research by Scribner and Cole (1981), Heath (1983) and others, identifies
sociocultural explanations of school failure: 1) discontinuities between the culture (values,
attitudes, and beliefs) of the home and school; 2) mismatches in communicative practices
between non-mainstream children and mainstream teachers that lead to miscommunication and
misjudgments; and 3) the internalization of negative stereotypes by minority groups who have
been marginalized and often see school as a site for opposition and resistance. Children whose
mode of discourse is different from that used in school instruction find themselves at a
disadvantage and often drop out, or are forced out, of school.
The ways in which children acquire language and construct knowledge in non-school
environments and the dynamic relationship with what they are taught in school is maximally
relevant to school learning. The conceptual and theoretical tool of spontaneous and scientific
concepts provides particularly interesting applications and expansions in literacy acquisition.
Literacy Acquisition
Since the time when Vygotsky and the young Russian psychologists of the nineteen-twenties
faced the social task of educating an overwhelmingly illiterate population following the
tremendous upheavals that transformed the Soviet Union during the Russian revolution of 1917,
literacy acquisition has been a central concern of sociocultural theory. For example, Scribner and
Cole (1981) built on Vygotsky's examination of the role of literacy in the transformation of
children's learning when they enter school and analyzed the relationship between literacy and
cognitive development. They found that literacy can be acquired independently of schooling
(particularly, schooling in the vast Western systems of education) and that literacy practices used
in different contexts will have specific effects on cognitive competencies. Their findings contrast
with more universal accounts of the relationship between literacy and formal modes of thought
(Olson, 1977).
Chang-Wells & Wells (1993) use Vygotsky's work on both learning and development and
spontaneous and scientific concepts to examine three dimensions of change in mental
functioning that can be ascribed to formal learning: intellectual-ization of mental functions,
bringing them under conscious and voluntary control; decontextualization, being able to detach a
concept from the context in which it was first encountered; and a movement toward integration
and systematization. They assert that all of these dimensions of cognitive change "are dependent
on literacy, when it is understood not simply as the encoding and decoding of written language
or the use of written texts for functional purposes but as engaging with texts of all kinds in ways
that exploit the symbolic representation of meaning as a means of empowering intrapersonal
mental activity" (p. 61). Using this theoretical foundation, they analyze the use of effective
instructional discourse in two classrooms designed to present literacy instruction in the students'
zones of proximal development.
To create an effective learning environment for literacy acquisition, Vygotsky (1978) wrote
that "teaching should be organized in such a way that reading and writing are necessary for
something....that writing should be meaningful....that writing be taught naturally....and that the
natural methods of teaching reading and writing involve appropriate operations on the child's
environment" (pp. 117-118). These considerations have influenced recent sociocultural
approaches to literacy instruction for children and adults in school, at workplaces, and in after-
school, home, and day-care settings (Clay & Cazden, 1990; John-Steiner, Panofsky, & Smith,
1994; McNamee, 1990; Scribner & Cole, 1981; Zebroski, 1994).
Using a genetic approach to literacy acquisition, sociocultural theory examines the origins of
both reading and writing. Panofsky (1994) studied the role of parent-child book reading in early
literacy socialization focusing on the functions and uses of language. She differentiated between
representational and interactional functions of language, building upon Vygotsky's distinctions.
Illustrating the roles of scaffolding and the zone of proximal development, she noted ...[A] shift
in the use of functions from a predominance of parent initiations to a predominance of child
initiations" (p. 239).
Vygotsky (1978) considered early literacy experiences important in the acquisition process.
He saw the origin of writing in a child's gesture which "is the initial visual sign that contains the
child's future writing as an acorn contains a future oak. Gestures, it has been correctly said, are
writing in air, and written signs frequently are simply gestures that have been fixed" (p. 107). In
the child's development there are two other domains in which gestures are linked to the origins
of written language -- the first is in scribbling and the dramatizations that often accompany it;
the second is in the area of symbolic play, where a child assigns meaning to an object through
gesture. The varied sources of writing in children's early years intrigued Vygotsky, who wrote of
drawing and play as preparation to literacy. In a related vein, McLane (1990) found in a study of
writing by children in an after-school day-care program that "children will, with adult
involvement and support, use writing as a resource for extending their interests in drawing, in
pretend and exploratory play, and as a means of exploring and conducting social relationships"
(p. 317).
As a result of being read to and using a writing tool to inscribe a piece of paper, or often a
wall, the child develops spontaneous concepts in the process of telling stories, acting out roles in
imaginative play, or creating representations. When children begin formal schooling, they start
with a foundation that is shaped by the nature of the interaction between caretaker and child, by
literacy uses valued by a particular culture, by print in the environment, and by the child's own
activity in literacy events. The challenge is to value and build on what the child brings to the
classroom. "By broadening both teachers' and students' views of students' backgrounds and
existing knowledge, the unique experiences that students bring to school make an important
contribution to the process of literacy acquisition" (Hiebert, 1991, p. 3). In a study of Latino
households in California, Gallimore and Goldenberg (1993) identified meaningful settings which
provide literacy activities, such as letter writing, for novice learners of reading and writing. They
focused on cultural experiences in everyday life and on the active participation of young learners
in literacy events. If such a focus is not adopted, teachers will not be able to understand their
students' attempts at literate ways of thinking (Langer, 1991) nor will they be able to provide the
learning opportunities to facilitate literacy acquisition for all students.
Such differences in language use in ethnically mixed classes often result in differential access
to literacy experiences....[T]eachers often unknowingly exclude or reduce the time minority
students participate in literacy activities because features of their discourse do not conform to
teachers' expectations or match their speaking style. (McCullom, 1991, pp. 111-112)
Understanding differences such as these are also important in teaching English to speakers of
other languages. Sociocultural theory recognizes the need for cultural, cognitive, and attitudinal
bridges between English as a Second Language (ESL) students and their new environment. The
use of dialogue journals with elementary and secondary students, as well as with adults, has been
found to be an effective technique to co-construct knowledge by allowing ESL students to draw
on their own experiences and develop their own voices in meaningful, interactive, written
communication (Mahn, 1992; Staton, Shuy, Peyton, & Reed, 1988).
In recent years there has been a critical re-evaluation of the traditional methods of literacy
instruction based on a single, universal time table and on cross-cultural universality. Vygotsky's
advice about teaching literacy as a natural process is realized in whole language (Goodman,
1975; Goodman & Goodman, 1979) and process approaches to reading and writing (Emig, 1971;
Calkins, 1986; Graves, 1983; Murray, 1985). These approaches view the interdependence of
social and individual processes as a natural part of each student's development (Scinto, 1986).
Reading and writing are not structured as solitary acts, but rather develop in collaborative efforts
in a community of learners (Zebroski, 1994). The core elements of these innovative approaches
to literacy instruction draw from and are supported by sociocultural theory and research.
The proponents and practitioners of such techniques and approaches, however, may not have
ever heard of Vygotsky nor of sociocultural approaches. Increasingly though, teachers exposed
to these ideas offer the sentiment that sociocultural theoretical perspectives provide the language
for what they are doing in their classrooms. This shows both the limitations of and the promise
for sociocultural approaches. Because this theory is complex and breaks radically from the
traditional American educational model in which teachers have been schooled, it is hard to
appropriate. The tendency is to abstract parts of the theory from the whole, which results in
distorted understandings and applications. As more educators become aware of the broad scope
of sociocultural theory, they will develop practical applications which will broaden and
strengthen this theoretical framework. Such a perspective offers exciting opportunities for
researchers and teachers as we face the challenges of educating youth for the twenty-first
century.
Conclusion
A goal for sociocultural theorists is the sustained development of methodological approaches
to educational and psychological research that focus on process and provide ways of
documenting change and transformation. In this article we have presented a sociocultural
approach to learning and development and implications for classroom learning and teaching. An
emerging theme in both theory and practice is the collaborative and transformative way in which
knowledge is co-constructed. We have focused on three central tenets from Vygotsky's complex
legacy -- social sources of individual development, semiotic mediation, and genetic analysis --
and have presented an argument for viewing learning as distributed, interactive, contextual, and
the result of the learners' participation in a community of practice.
Our aim has been to weave together some of Vygotsky's key ideas with pressing,
contemporary concerns, particularly the need to shape educational institutions to deliver
instruction which meets the needs of all students, especially the linguistically and culturally
diverse who historically have been marginalized by traditional models of pedagogy. We believe
a sociocultural point of view provides a deeper understanding of both the possibilities for and the
problematic nature of educational reform. Because educational institutions are a part of and
reflect the larger social system in which they are situated, a proposal for substantial reform
would have to consider economic, political, historical, social, and cultural factors. While such an
analysis was not the intent in this article, we believe a concept it has presented -- the socially
structured interdependence of teaching and research, theory construction, and educational
intervention -- provides a starting point for local reform initiatives, such as the ones in Brazil
described previously.
In the sociocultural framework notions of community and participation have been applied
primarily to novice learners. The applications of these notions to adults to study the dynamics of
collaboration and the interdependence of individual and social processes are areas for further
practical and theoretical development. Social constructivist frameworks, though not necessarily
contradictory to sociocultural ones, focus more on the possibilities for change within the
individual child, while sociocultural theoretical perspectives, as they develop and are applied to
educational systems, look at change at different levels of analysis and organization. Central to
the task of educators and psychologists is conceiving of our work as a system rather than as a set
of isolated activities. The sociocultural perspective can only thrive with the continued, and at
times discordant, articulation of the many voices of this thought community.
Footnotes
1. Vygotsky's works have been studied and interpreted by a variety of scholars, some of whom
prefer to use the term cultural-historical. In this article we refer broadly to the legacy of
Vygotsky's work and the contributions to and interpretations of his theory as the sociocultural
approach. Of particular significance in the varied expansions of this framework are the
contributions of activity theorists, including Leontiev (1978) and Engeström (1987, 1990). See
the journal Mind, Culture, and Activity for the breadth of disciplines and countries represented
by contributors to the sociocultural enterprise. Mind, Culture, and Activity is published four
times a year by the Laboratory of Comparative Human Cognition, University of California, San
Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0092. Fax (619) 534-7746.
2. As first used by Wood, Bruner and Ross (1976), scaffolding is a metaphor for graduated
assistance provided to the novice, akin to the carpenter's scaffold.
3. Supported by National Science Foundation Grant #SBR-9423277, together with Michele
Minnis, Robert J. Weber, and Teresa Meehan, we are examining values, roles, responsibilities,
working methods, and conflict-resolution strategies to develop patterns of collaboration in long-
term interdisciplinary and inter-institutional projects organized to solve complex social and
technical problems. The two main collaborative groups we are analyzing consist of adults
involved in a water consortium and adults and adolescents participating in a program whose
focus is on middle school students whose home, school, and community environments make
them susceptible to drug and alcohol abuse.
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"We can formulate the genetic law of cultural development in the following way: any
function in the child's cultural development appears on stage twice, on two planes. First it
appears on the social plane, then on the psychological, first among people as an interpsyhical
category and then within the child as an intrapsychical category".
The Man and his Ideas
His Life: by Gita Vygodskaya
This one is a gem. Gita Vygodskaya reflects on growing up with her father and offers a personal
look into the man who is referred to as the Mozart of Psychology.
Vygotsky Before Vygotsky
Nikolai Veresov offers a historical and methodological analysis of Vygotsky's ideas. The work
focuses on Vygotsky's writings from 1917-1927. This is the introduction to his book,
Undiscovered Vygotsky, which can be purchased from the Nateweb bookstore.
Vygotsky's Sociohistorical Psychology
Carl Ratner discusses the significance of Vygotsky's Sociohistorical Psychology. He discusses
Vygotsky's early work and politics, sociohistorical and sociogenesis character of psychological
processes, as well as contrasts to other approaches. Ratner does a good job at incorporating
Vygotsky's ideas into contemporary research including his own.
Practice - Vygotsky's tool-and-result methodology and psychology
Chapter 3 from Fred Newman and Lois Holzman's book, Lev Vygotsky: Revolutionary
Scientist.
Prologue to Collected Works Volume 5.
Carl Ratner introduces the reader to the most important concepts Vygotsky discusses in
Collected Works Volume 5. These include higher / lower psychological processes, integration of
psychological processes, qualitative change, and form / content. Ratner does a very good job at
introducing and summerizing Vygotsky's ideas from Child Pychology
Semiotics of Play
Rafal Dziurla looks at the importance of some of Vygotsky's ideas about play. The focus of the
paper is on the role Vygotsky gave to play in the development of generalisation (meaning).
Why Vygotsky
Steven Kerr asks the interesting question, Why Vygotsky?, in reference to educational reform in
both Russia and the West.
Vygotsky Compared to Others
Critical Theory and Vygotsky
Willem Wardekker looks at the similarities and differences between Critical Theory and
Vygotskian Theory. He primarily focuses on the topic of personality formation and argues the
benefit of Vygotskian theory lies in its denial of an "authentic" human subject and its more
positive conception of plurality on both a soceital and personality level. Wardekker's conclusion
is a Vygotskian approach to personality must be more "radical" than Radical Pedagogy.
Piaget and Vygotsky
James Wertsch and Mike Cole give an good comparison of Vygotsky and Piaget's theories of
child development. They argue that the division of social and individual does not hold up
because both Vygotsky and Piaget valued the individual and social forces in development. Both
saw the social-individual relationally, but by Vygotsky focusing on mediation he gave the social
a very specific role in development.
Vygotsky and Bakhtin
J. Allan Cheyne and Donato Tarulli look at the similarities and differences between Vygotsky
and Bakhtin's use of the "other" or third voice. The focus primarily on their ideas in relation to
rethinking the zone of proximal development. They expand the ZPD to include Magistral,
Socratic, and Menippean dialogues. They argue the expanded ZPD provides a medium for
cultural-historical as well as developmental change.
D.Sociocultural Theory
Many developmental scientists believe that children do not proceed through universal stages or processes of development. To sociocultural theorists, children’s growth is deeply guided by the values, goals, and expectations of their culture. In this perspective, children acquire skills valued by their culture—such as reading, managing crops, or using an abacus—through the guidance and support of older people. Thus, developmental abilities may differ for children in different societies, and development cannot be separated from its cultural context.
One of the pioneers of sociocultural theory was Russian psychologist Lev Vygotsky, whose writings in the 1920s and 1930s emphasized how children’s interaction with adults contributes to the development of skills. According to Vygotsky, sensitive adults are aware of a child’s readiness for new challenges, and they structure appropriate activities to help the child develop new skills. Adults act as mentors and teachers, leading the child into the zone of proximal development—Vygotsky’s term for the range of skills that the child cannot perform unaided but can master with adult assistance. A parent may encourage simple number concepts, for example, by counting beads with the child or measuring cooking ingredients together, filling in the numbers that the child cannot remember. As children participate in such experiences daily with parents, teachers, and others, they gradually learn the culture’s practices, skills, and values.
Sociocultural theory highlights how children incorporate culture into their reasoning, social interaction, and self-understanding. It also explains why children growing up in different societies are likely to have significantly different skills. Theorists like Vygotsky are sometimes criticized, however, for neglecting the influence of biological maturation, which guides childhood growth independently of culture.
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